Quantum suppression of cold reactions far from the quantum regime

Or Katz*, Meirav Pinkas, Nitzan Akerman, Roee Ozeri

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle

Abstract

Reactions between pairs of atoms are ubiquitous processes in chemistry and physics. Quantum scattering effects on reactions are only observed at extremely ultracold temperatures, close to the s-wave regime, with a small number of partial waves involved. At higher temperatures, the different phases associated with the centrifugal barriers of different partial waves average-out quantum interference to yield semi-classical reaction rates. Here we use quantum-logic to experimentally study resonant charge-exchange reactions between single cold pairs of neutral 87Rb atoms and optically-inaccessible 87Rb+ ions far above the s-wave regime. We find that the measured charge-exchange rate is greatly suppressed with respect to the semi-classical prediction. Our results indicate for the first time that quantum interference persists and effects reaction rates at very high temperatures, at least three orders of magnitude higher than the ultracold s-wave regime.
Original languageEnglish
Number of pages11
Journalarxiv.org
DOIs
Publication statusIn preparation - 16 Aug 2022

Funding

This work was supported by the Israeli Science Foundation and the Goldring Family Foundation. We thank Marko Cetina, Maks Walewski, Mathew Frye and Michał Tomza for fruitful discussions.

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Quantum suppression of cold reactions far from the quantum regime'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this